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Infrastructure Deficit

Infrastructure in the 12 th Plan: Challenges and Opportunities - Gajendra Haldea September 28, 2011 New Delhi. Infrastructure Deficit. Power 13.3% peaking deficit and 10.1% energy shortage; 27% T&D losses; absence of competition; and inadequate private investment Highways

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Infrastructure Deficit

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  1. Infrastructure in the 12th Plan:Challenges and Opportunities - Gajendra Haldea September 28, 2011New Delhi

  2. Infrastructure Deficit Power • 13.3% peaking deficit and 10.1% energy shortage; 27% T&D losses; absence of competition; and inadequate private investment Highways • 70,934 Km of NH(2% of network, 40% of traffic): only 20% Four-lane; 50% Two-lane; and 30% Single-lane; State highways also suffer from prolonged neglect Ports • Inadequate berths, rail / road connectivity and draft are constraints Airports • Inadequate capacity: Runways, aircraft handling capacity, parking space & terminal buildings Railways • Old technology; saturated routes: slow average speeds (freight: 22 kmph; passengers: 50 kmph); low payload to Tare ratio (2.5)

  3. Projected Investment in Infrastructure based on Growth Targets: Twelfth Plan (Rs. crore at 2006-07 prices)

  4. Methodology of Projections Using 2011-12 as the base year, the following annual growth rates have been assumed for Twelfth Plan period. • Central Sector:9% in all sectors • State Sector:9% in electricity, roads, railways, irrigation, water supply & sanitation. 5% in ports, airports and storage • Private Sector:25% in all sectors Growth rates have been assumed on the basis of past trends and perceived sectoral dynamics in the Plan period.

  5. Investment by Centre, States & Private Sector (Rs. crore at 2006-07 prices) (per cent share in brackets)

  6. Policy Challenges • Challenges for large capacity addition • Time-bound delivery under budgetary constraints • World class yet cost effective • Commercially sustainable yet affordable • Policy responses for attracting private investment • Policy and regulatory framework for PPPs is in place • Institutional restructuring and reorientation underway • Financial support to bridge viability gap of PPP projects • IIFCL, Infrastructure Debt Funds etc. for long term debt

  7. Division of Labour • PublicSector to continue, and even expand • Especially in segments that can’t be commercialised, such as rural roads • Expected CAGR of budgetary allocations: about 9% in real terms • Increased reliance on PPPs for additionality & improved efficiency • In segments that can be commercialised, eg. highways, ports, airports & rail concessions • Much of additional investment through PPPs • Independent private investment wherever feasible • Telecom, power generation/supply, container trains etc.

  8. Stages of PPPs I. Public sector provision of Infrastructure: Command & Control - PPP by exception II. Introduction of PPPs: The Transition - still on in some sectors/states - Largely negotiated; characterised by rent-seeking - Driven by private beneficiaries (eg. Dabhol, NOIDA bridge) III. PPPs gain acceptability: Enhancing welfare & efficiency - Transparent, competitive and fair - Driven by the government; good governance becomes the key - Objective is to attract private capital in public projects • Indian PPP projects are mostly in Stage III

  9. Paradigm Shift • Successful reform initiatives have universally relied on: - leadership from head of government - creation of inter-ministerial and inter-disciplinary processes for overcoming incumbent pressures and perceptions • Infrastructure reforms in India have been ledand by CoI/CCI • PPP has gained wide ownership and support across the government. A paradigm shift has occurred.

  10. Financial Support to PPPs • Viability Gap Funding (VGF) upto 20% of capital costs based on competetive bidding; another 20% VGF by project authority • 324central and state projects with an investment of Rs. 2,51,298 cr. (US$ 63 bn) cleared with a possible VGF commitment of Rs. 50,000 cr. (US$ 12.5 bn) • India Infrastructure Finance Company (IIFCL) provides upto 20% of capital costs as long-term debt for viable projects • IIFCL has sanctioned Rs. 27,572 cr. (US$ 7 bn) for 189 projects

  11. Financing Constraints • Competing demands on budgetary resources: health, education, rural development, livelihood support programmes etc. • Budgetary allocation cannot be increased beyond 9% p.a. in real terms; reliance on private investment is inevitable • Private equity not viewed as a constraint; markets have responded well • Possible debt gap of $ 100 bn in the 12th Plan; policy responses under way

  12. Issues in Financing by Banks • Excessive reliance on commercial banks (51%); exposure up from 1.8% of their lending in FY 2001 to 10.2% in FY 2009; CAGR of 40% • Tenure of loans is inadequate as their deposits are short term • Asset-liability mismatch (ALM) is a serious issue • Shorter tenures raises costs/user charges • Banks are exhausting their prudential limits in terms of sector, borrower and project exposures

  13. Lack of Long-term debt • Insurance and pension funds have stayed away owing to their risk perceptions • Bond markets in India continue to be shallow • IIFCL was set up for providing long-term debt; a partial success • NBFC’s provide 27% of debt but not for long tenures • ECB also provides limited tenures • Tenure of debt is a critical issue in financing infrastructure

  14. Long-term debt: Policy Responses • Setting up Infrastructure Debt Funds to channelise long-term insurance & pension funds through credit enhancement • Introduction of tax-free Infrastructure Bonds • Take-out financing scheme introduced by IIFCL • High-level Committee set up to recommend policy initiatives for financing the $ 1 trillion investment in 12th Plan

  15. Telecom: A spectacular success story • Private investment increased from Rs. 5,936 cr. (US$ 1.5 bn) in 2002-03 to Rs. 51,019 cr. (US$ 12.8)in 2009-10 (8.6 times) • Share of private investment increased from 28% in 2002-03 to80% in 2009-10; CAGR of 36% during this period • Target of 15% tele-density by 2010 achieved 3 years ahead of schedule • Over 1 croremobile connections added every month; total of 85 croreby June 2011 • Lowest tariffs in the world • Competition and access to consumers was the driving force

  16. Power: Constrained growth • T&D losses exceed 27%; provisional losses of Rs. 60,000 cr. (US$ 15 bn) in 2010-11; 13% peak shortage & 10% energy shortage • Utilities bought 600 cr units from traders at an average price of Rs. 5.5 per unit (Rs. 33,000 cr in 09-10) -highest tariff in the world • Traded power purchased solely by state-owned utilities; unregulated trading has increased utilitylosses sharply • CAGR of private investment 23% between 2002-03 and 2009-10 • Absence of competition and access to consumers seems the principal cause for inadequate investment and shortages.

  17. Governance: Typical Issues • Unwillingness of incumbents to cede control over construction & operation of projects • Denial of level playing field is an issue • Rent-seeking is also an issue • Inadequate and inefficient roll out of projects - The demand for PPP projects is far greater than their supply • Incumbentmindsetconstitutes a major challenge

  18. Governance Structure for PPPs • Constitution of a Cabinet Committee on Infrastructure (CCI) • Prime Minister is the Chairperson • Ministers of Infrastructure Ministries, Finance Minister and Deputy Chairman, Planning Commission are members • PPP Appraisal Committee • Appraises & recommends all PPP projects of the Central Government • Chaired by Finance; appraisal by Planning Commission • Cleared 242 projects with an investment of Rs. 2,01,725 cr. (US$ 50 bn) • Empowered Committee • Approves proposals of State Governments for Viability Gap Funding • Chaired by Finance; appraisal by Planning Commission • Cleared 82 projects with an investment of Rs. 49,573 cr. (US$ 12 bn)

  19. Governance Structure for PPPs (contd.) • PPPs have been integrated in the planning process • Ministries retain their role but work closely with CCI to develop & implement the vision for world-class infrastructure • Greater reliance on inter-ministerial and inter-disciplinary dialogue to enrich outcomes and eliminate conflicts of interest. • Consultations with stakeholders, including users and investors • Simplification & standardisation of documents & processes

  20. Typical documents for PPP projects • Substantive Documents - Concession Agreements - Manual of Specifications & Standards - Rules for user charges • Process Documents - RFQ for pre-qualification of bidders - RFP for financial bids - RFP for selection of consultants

  21. Framework Documents Model Concession Agreements published for PPP in: • National Highways • State Highways • Ports • Operation & Maintenance of Highways • Urban Rail Systems (Metro rail) • Container Train Operation • Redevelopment of Railway Stations • Non-metro Airports • Greenfield Airports • Procurement-cum-Maintenance of Locomotives • Transmission of electricity

  22. Framework Documents (contd.) Model Bidding Documents for PPP projects • Request for Qualification Document (RFQ) for pre-qualification of bidders • Request for Proposal (RFP) for selection of bidder • RFP for Selection of Technical Consultants • RFP for Selection of Legal Advisors • RFP for Selection of Financial Consultants Guidelines for Appraisal, Approval and Assistance for PPP projects • Guidelines for Financial Support to PPPs in Infrastructure (VGF Scheme) • Guidelines for Appraisal and Approval of PPP Projects (PPPAC) • Scheme for Financing through India Infrastructure Finance Co. (IIFCL) • Guidelines for establishing Joint Ventures (JVs) in Infrastructure

  23. Some illustrative PPP projects • Jaipur-KishengarhHighway • Delhi, Mumbai, Hyderabad & Bangalore Airports • Two metro-rail projects in Mumbai and one in Hyderabad • 182 National Highway projects (14,441 km) for Rs.1,23,590 cr • 137 State Highway projects (8,862 km) for Rs. 64,787 cr • 22 central sector port terminals for Rs. 18,489 cr and 57 state sector port terminals for Rs. 71,253 cr • Four Ultra mega Power Projects: Sasan(MP), Mundra (Gujarat), Krishnapatnam (AP) and Tilaiya (Jharkhand) • Container terminals at JNPT, Chennai & Tuticorin • 15 concessions for operation of container trains • Jhajjar Power Transmission Project, Haryana

  24. Initiatives at State level • States have initiated several PPP projects • State PPP projects are availing upto 20% of capital costs as VGF grant from Central Government • They are also availing upto 20% of capital costs as long-term loans from IIFCL • Technical assistance being provided by Planning Commission • Assistance for capacity building being provided by the Finance Ministry

  25. Way forward • Reinforce the enabling environment for private investment • Adopt standardiseddocuments for accelerating investment flows & for ensuring safe and competitive delivery • Leveragebudgetary resources & multi-lateral loans for PPPs • Accelerate the roll-out of PPP projects • Enhance the flow of long-term debt to infrastructure sector • Objective is to create world class infrastructure

  26. Thank YouFor further details please visithttp://infrastructure.gov.in

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